Now That They Are Grown: Successfully Parenting Your Adult Children
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About this ebook
We don’t stop being parents when our kids are grown...but some things do change.
Life is filled with change. As our sons and daughters move into young adulthood, our role of what it means to be loving parents changes dramatically.
This book aims to help readers miss as many potholes as possible in making the transition from parenting children to being parents of young adults. Here are ways to nurture our adult children while encouraging their independence and maturity. Learn to have balance. Here is how to respond to them in times of struggle. Readers will see how to be supportive, yet not intrusive, caring without enabling dependency.
The questions are important. The answers are not obvious. It is a new day in our relationships with our children. The page has been turned, and we are now writing the new chapter in the life of our family. It is important that we get it right.
Ronald J. Greer
Pastoral counselor Ron Greer is the author of four books: The Path of Compassion: Living with Heart, Soul, and Mind, Now That They Are Grown: Successfully Parenting Your Adult Children, Markings on the Windowsill: A Book About Grief That’s Really About Hope, and If You Know Who You Are, You’ll Know What to Do: Living with Integrity. He is the Director of the Pastoral Counseling Service at Peachtree Road United Methodist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, having been with this ministry for forty years. He is an ordained United Methodist minister, a Fellow of the American Association of Pastoral Counselors, and a Clinical Fellow of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy. A native of Louisiana, he has a Bachelor of Science from Louisiana State University, a Masters of Divinity from the Candler School of Theology at Emory University, and a Masters of Theology in pastoral counseling from Columbia Theological Seminary.
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Reviews for Now That They Are Grown
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Now That They Are Grown - Ronald J. Greer
NOW
That They Are
GROWN
I have looked forward to Ron Greer's latest offering with great anticipation, and Now That They Are Grown exceeds all of my expectations. Ron is a wise and helpful guide for parents looking for a mature, healthy relationship with their adult children. His writing comes across as a long-trusted friend who is passing along valuable wisdom gleaned from years of experience gained while walking this road with others. Ron's words not only educate, but they also encourage parents that they can do this! Now That They Are Grown is a job well done!
—Dr. Bill Britt, Senior Minister, Peachtree Road United Methodist Church
A prominent college coach was recently asked if players had changed in the last few years. His answer would not have surprised Ron Greer. Naw,
he emphatically stated in his southern twang. The kids are the same. They just want to play. But the parents have lost their minds!
Ron may not be quite that critical, but he knows most of us need help in dealing with our adult children when they are busy flying the coop. He has written a wonderful guide for parents who have maintained their sanity but simply do not know what to do. Enjoy Ron's stories, but mostly take note of his wisdom. I know it will change your life, it may change your children's lives, and it might even help the grandchildren!
—Bill Curry, Georgia State University head football coach and the author of Ten Men You Meet in the Huddle: Lessons from a Football Life
Ron has shared (his) wisdom in Now That They Are Grown: Successfully Parenting Your Adult Children. This book is an easy read; is chock-full of wisdom; and is sensitively, caringly, creatively composed. This pastoral counselor knows the dynamics of parenting adult children in this contemporary context. He advocates mutual respect and magnanimous good will between the generations both in letting them go
and in negotiating a new adult-to-adult relationship.
—Dr. Jap Keith, Southeast Regional Director of the Association for
Clinical Pastoral Education, Inc., Professor Emeritus of Pastoral Care and Counseling of Columbia Theological Seminary, American Association of Pastoral Counselors
Ronald J.Greer
NOW
That They Are
GROWN
Successfully
Parenting
Your Adult
Children
Abingdon Press
Nashville
Now That They Are Grown
Successfullly Parenting Your Adult
Children
Copyright © 2012 by Abingdon Press
All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except as may be expressly permitted by the 1976 Copyright Act or in writing from the publisher. Requests for permission can be addressed to Permissions, The United Methodist Publishing House, P.O. Box 801, 201 Eighth Avenue South, Nashville, TN 37202-0801, or e-mailed to permissions@umpublishing.org.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
ISBN 978-1-4267-4191-3
Cataloging in Publication Data has been applied for with the Library of Congress.
Scripture quotations, unless otherwise noted, are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyrighted 1989, by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission.
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21—10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
To Karen
my dear partner in this experience
of being the parents
of two wonderful adults
For everything there is a season,
and a time for every matter under heaven:
a time to be born, and a time to die;
a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted; . . .
a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing.
—Ecclesiastes 3:1-2, 5b
Contents
Prologue
1. Letting Go
2. Today's Young Adults
3. Resetting the Sails
4. Respecting Their Need for Respect
5. Good-bye, Hello
6. Supporting Their New Lives
7. Dealing with the Difficult Times
8. Empty Nest
Epilogue
Notes
Prologue
WE HAD JUST MET, but quickly the conversation turned to the recent marriage of her son. This delightful woman explained he was her youngest child, the last to be married. The mother of the groom was still aglow over the wedding and told me all about it.
I remember nothing of the wedding details. Yet I remember vividly her description of the events that followed.
After the wedding reception, her husband dropped her off at their home and left to run an errand. She said she went inside alone and made herself a cup of coffee. She took it into the den, slipped off her shoes, propped her feet up on the ottoman, and for the next fifteen minutes just sat there reliving the glorious wedding that had just taken place.
Finishing her coffee, she took the cup back to the kitchen and started down the hall to change out of her elegant dress. She said she got halfway down the hall, to the doorway of the bedroom of her son who had just married. She described it as if a magnet had pulled her into his room. She looked around. There on the wall were his posters and his banners. There on his chest of drawers were his trophies and the picture of his sweetheart who was now his bride. And there on the floor, at the foot of his bed, were two dirty socks.
She said, I was all right until I got to the socks. But I knew it was the last pair of his dirty socks I'd ever pick up again.
The tears came to her eyes as she told it, just as the tears had come to her eyes as she had lived it. With tissue now in hand, she described how she ran down the hall, threw herself on her bed, and had the cry she needed to have.
Her life had changed. It had been, indeed, a day of celebration. But in the privacy of her heart, in the privacy of her home, she could feel the rest of the story. She would always be her sons' mama, but—having invested three decades in actively mothering—she was a seasoned veteran at a role that was no longer needed.
Image1Life is filled with change. As our sons and daughters move into young adulthood, our roles as loving parents change dramatically. Now they are grown. It's time for changes. We will make the transition, though not always with the grace we would prefer.
The intent of this book is to help us avoid as many pitfalls as possible in making the change from parenting children to being parents of young adults. It's a challenge. It isn't easy. How do we nurture our adult children while encouraging their independence and maturity? Where is the balance? How do we respond to them in times of struggle? What is supportive, yet not intrusive? What is caring, yet not enabling dependency?
The questions are important. The answers are not obvious. It is a new day and a new relationship. The page has been turned, and we are now writing the new chapter in the life of our family. It is important that we get it right. It is important that we are true to the integrity of who we as parents and children are . . . now.
1
Letting Go
I think of the pages that follow as a conversation between you and me—fellow parents of adult sons and daughters— like my conversation with the mother of the groom. I imagine us, as friends, sitting on the deck of a cabin looking out over the mountains of western North Carolina. A group of us, now empty nesters, have gone up for a relaxing weekend. No agenda. Just hiking, talking, and doing nothing purposeful. It's early morning. You and I are the first two up. We are even ahead of the sun, though it's not far beneath the horizon. We see the silhouette of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the distance. Below us, in the valley, is a blanket of thick morning fog.
The air is chilly as we each settle comfortably into our rocking chairs, sipping our coffee and talking. We readily solve the world's problems. Then the talk turns to family. I see some concern on your face as you talk about your children, and I begin asking questions. You seem relieved, almost glad to be invited to talk about it.
You explain that there is no current crisis and that you have wonderful children, but you are struggling with defining the new relationship with them. This new role seems to be part parent, part friend, but when are you which? And how? What is it supposed to look like? Sometimes they ask your opinion—then at other times they seem to resent your giving it. You are still trying to hit your stride.
You pause and mention you are a little embarrassed even to be talking about it, especially with no crisis at hand. But this is too puzzling and too important not to talk it through.
So, with coffee in hand, let's talk.¹
THE RELATIONSHIPS with our adult children can become truly wonderful. But it takes real effort. It takes being intentional. Our sons and daughters move from childhood to adulthood. We move from being a parent to becoming a peer. It is a transition we may navigate awkwardly, but ultimately it's a relationship we can successfully redefine.
From the moment of our children's births, when they were totally reliant on us, we began a two-decade process from their dependence to their independence, two decades of what was often a turbulent ride. Infancy was followed by childhood, and then came adolescence (God bless us all), with its disconnection, its turmoil, and its breaking away. And one day this disconnection and turmoil subsided (thank you, Jesus) and transformed into a new chapter that we can embrace and enjoy the rest of our lives. This disconnection ends, when it all goes well, with the reconnection of a healthy, mutually respectful relationship as adults to adults. We don't cease to nurture. We don't cease being parents. We redefine parenthood based on our new peer-ship with our adult children.
But how on earth do we get there? Let's start with what I have come to see as the goals of parenting young adults.
GOALS OF PARENTING
YOUNG ADULTS
There are four goals we will use as our focus as we parent young adults:
To help them move forward into this new chapter of their lives, with new directions, priorities, and loyalties.
To help them achieve their full maturity as adults, taking responsibility for their lives, making wise decisions, and living with integrity and character.
To establish a new, loving relationship with them—adult to adult—with mutual respect and appropriate boundaries.
To become more focused on this new chapter of our lives; with the nest now empty, we spread our wings, too, in new directions with new priorities.
I begin with these goals to serve as anchors, as touchstones to help with our